David DeWitt is the Editor-in-Chief of the Ohio Capital Journal. He’s been covering the goings on in that state for more than 15 years. In this conversation, we are talking about the important and controversial election in Ohio this coming August.
Earlier this month, the Ohio State Supreme Court ruled that the election could go ahead as the Cap Journal reported:
Along party lines, the Ohio Supreme Court on Friday gave the green light to an attempt by Republican leaders of the state’s gerrymandered legislature to make it much harder for voters to amend the state Constitution. The court ruled in a 4-3 decision that it’s OK for the issue to be placed on the Aug. 8 ballot even though the legislature just outlawed such elections in January.
The Republican majority said that regardless of the law, the Ohio Constitution gives the legislature great latitude in deciding when elections will be held. In a dissent, the Democratic minority argued that while that might be the case, the legislature still has to follow the laws it has passed — and change the ones it doesn’t like.
Issue 1 would raise the percentage of votes needed to pass a voter-initiated amendment from 50% to 60%. It would also require that a given number of the hundreds of thousands of signatures needed to get an amendment on the ballot come from each of Ohio’s 88 counties instead of the current 44.
Critics — including bipartisan groups of former governors and attorneys general and more than 240 other groups — say the requirements would make voter-initiated amendments practically impossible. Some add that Issue 1 would greatly enhance the gerrymandered legislature’s power over the state Constitution relative to that of Ohio voters — the exact opposite of what former President Theodore Roosevelt argued for when he successfully advocated adoption of the current system in 1912.
Republican leaders, including Secretary of State Frank LaRose, pushing the amendment have given inconsistent reasons for why it’s needed. But to partisan audiences they’ve conceded that one reason for putting the matter on the ballot in a low-turnout Aug. 8 election is to try to block a voter-initiated abortion-rights amendment expected to be on the ballot in November.
Ohio journalist David DeWitt talks about the upcoming August 8th election and how we got here
Even if you know Ohio as the land democracy forget, you will want to hear David on the issues at stake.
Jun 22, 2023

The Big Picture with Edwin Eisendrath
Complete episodes from my weekly radio show, The Big Picture on WCPT 820am, where I talk to incredible, smart guests about politics and saving our democracy.
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